Archives: Newsletter Post
Wonder Struck by Helen de Cruz
Last week a student told me his dyslexia both made him unusually creative and gave him a special sense of wonder. From what I knew of him, the claim made intuitive sense to me. He is the kind of wildly clever student who sees and connects dots others never even see. I had Eoin in […]
Seeing the Good: An Interview with Fr. Greg Boyle
Greg Boyle’s 2010 bestselling book, Tattoos on the Heart: The Power of Boundless Compassion, has been an inspiration to our work at the Institute for Social Concerns. In the book, Boyle writes, “our common human hospitality longs to find room for those who are left out.” For Boyle, this hospitality looks like radical kinship, based on […]
Generous Lives
At this time of year, we are reminded of light in darkness, hope, and the profound ways generosity can touch lives. Harvey Mudd engineering professor Joshua Brake offers some reflections on the impact of everyday generosity. Read more.
Gratitude & Generosity Connections
It is the time of year to think about thanksgiving. Baylor psychologist and neuroscientist Sarah Schnitker offers some reflections on the connection between gratitude and generosity. She encourages us to consider not only what we are grateful for, but who we are grateful to. Read more.
Hope for Cynics by Jamil Zaki
Stanford neuroscientist Jamil Zaki is a self-professed cynic. I liked him immediately. I felt we would have much in common. Though as director of the Stanford Social Neuroscience Lab, Jaki knows what I do not. He has significant evidence that cynical people tend to have worse physical and mental health. They die younger. At a […]
The Unitive Effect of Character at Austin Community College
What does character education add to the educational vision of a community college? Though in the early stages of their work, Ted Hadzi-Antich, Grant Potts, and Arun John at Austin Community College (ACC), suspect there will be a fulsome payoff for civic communities, employers, and, of course, the students themselves. In short, everyone benefits when […]
Generosity & Work
Christopher Wong Michaelson, the Opus Distinguished Professor at the University of St. Thomas, reflects on his Confucian grandfather’s philiosophy of work, generosity, and the ways we gain a new perspective on work through the eyes of those around us. He writes, “Seeing work through the eyes of those who love us and who have a […]
Love’s Braided Dance by Norman Wirzba
Earlier this month I heard Bryan Stevenson, acclaimed civil rights attorney and founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative, speak in South Bend. As he does in his memoir, Just Mercy, Stevenson began his talk by making a case for the importance of proximity. He argued that it was simply essential to get close […]
Virtues and Values: Cultural Change in the Texas Tech System
Something unprecedented is underway within the five universities that make up the Texas Tech University System. While many universities look to infuse character education into their curriculum, Texas Tech is focusing on the adults it employs. The gamble is that investing in culture change by putting its people first will affect institutional change. And it’s […]
Considering Generosity in Higher Education
As we release the next issue of Virtues & Vocations: Higher Education for Human Flourishing, we want to highlight a reflection by Middlebury College president Laurie Patton on “Generosity in Everyday Academic Life.” Patton writes, “Institutions of higher education are caught in the middle of this ideological polarization, and those who work in them struggle […]